It’s an honorable Directors Guild tradition to have one member interview another. But Sofia Coppola landed a big fish when fellow-Oscar-winner Joel Coen agreed to interview her for Somewhere, perhaps because he respects her lack of eagerness to participate in such events. While both are accomplished writer-directors (Ethan Coen shares with Joel writing and producing credits on such films as Fargo and No Country for Old Men), neither are known for being particularly forthcoming in interviews. But it was in both of their interest to do this, as Coen is just finishing True Grit, another possible Oscar contender.

Coen, who began by professing his admiration of Coppola’s body of work, kick-started the discussion with a question he said he gets asked a lot: “When you were little, did you make movies with your brothers?” Coppola’s brother, Roman, is actually a producer on the film, and her father, film giant and oenophile Francis Ford Coppola, is an executive producer. The Lost in Translation director drew a big laugh when talking about the role her father plays in her own filmmaking saying, “I feel like he’s sort of a… well, I don’t want to say ‘godfather.’ But I can go to him for questions and advice along the way.”

Coppola said she wanted to have Somewhere be a smaller, more intimate film after all the costumes and Versailles-shoots necessary for 2006’s Marie Antoinette. “And also, I wanted to do something from a guy’s point of view,” she told the audience. “Marie Antoinette was so decorative, and girly, and frilly, that after that, I wanted to do something as minimal as possible. Just something different after being in that crazy macaroon world for so long.” When she was asked by an audience member why she takes such a long time between movies, Coen, who has made a movie a year with his brother for the last four years, interjected, “Work faster!”

Both Somewhere and True Grit open on Dec. 22. Here’s my interview with Coppola from the Venice Fest, where the movie won the Golden Lion.